Re: [PATCH v2 07/10] phy: qcom-qmp: Add support for DP in USB3+DP combo phy

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On 9/4/20 8:57 AM, Dmitry Baryshkov wrote:
On 04/09/2020 15:44, Jonathan Marek wrote:
On 9/4/20 8:29 AM, Dmitry Baryshkov wrote:
On 03/09/2020 23:43, Jonathan Marek wrote:
On 9/2/20 7:02 PM, Stephen Boyd wrote:
Add support for the USB3 + DisplayPort (DP) "combo" phy to the qmp phy
driver. We already have support for the USB3 part of the combo phy, so
most additions are for the DP phy.

Split up the qcom_qmp_phy{enable,disable}() functions into the phy init,
power on, power off, and exit functions that the common phy framework
expects so that the DP phy can add even more phy ops like
phy_calibrate() and phy_configure(). This allows us to initialize the DP PHY and configure the AUX channel before powering on the PHY at the link
rate that was negotiated during link training.

The general design is as follows:

   1) DP controller calls phy_init() to initialize the PHY and configure
   the dp_com register region.

   2) DP controller calls phy_configure() to tune the link rate and
   voltage swing and pre-emphasis settings.

   3) DP controller calls phy_power_on() to enable the PLL and power on
   the phy.

   4) DP controller calls phy_configure() again to tune the voltage swing
   and pre-emphasis settings determind during link training.

   5) DP controller calls phy_calibrate() some number of times to change
   the aux settings if the aux channel times out during link training.

   6) DP controller calls phy_power_off() if the link rate is to be
   changed and goes back to step 2 to try again at a different link rate.

   5) DP controller calls phy_power_off() and then phy_exit() to power
   down the PHY when it is done.

The DP PHY contains a PLL that is different from the one used for the
USB3 PHY. Instead of a pipe clk there is a link clk and a pixel clk
output from the DP PLL after going through various dividers. Introduce
clk ops for these two clks that just tell the child clks what the
frequency of the pixel and link are. When the phy link rate is
configured we call clk_set_rate() to update the child clks in the
display clk controller on what rate is in use. The clk frequencies
always differ based on the link rate (i.e. 1.6Gb/s 2.7Gb/s, 5.4Gb/s, or
8.1Gb/s corresponding to various transmission modes like HBR1, HBR2 or
HBR3) so we simply store the link rate and use that to calculate the clk
frequencies.

The PLL enable sequence is a little different from other QMP phy PLLs so we power on the PLL in qcom_qmp_phy_configure_dp_phy() that gets called
from phy_power_on(). This should probably be split out better so that
each phy has a way to run the final PLL/PHY enable sequence.

This code is based on a submission of this phy and PLL in the drm
subsystem.

I updated my upstream-based sm8150/sm8250 displayport stack [1] to use these patches.

I have tried your branch on my RB5 with two different dongles. Both dongles provide the same behaviour:
  - on first plug I see VDM Tx errors,
  - after I unplug and replug the dongle, PD phy seems to be stuck on sending capabilities.

See attached logs.

Also I had to add typec_unregister_port(port->typec_port); to IS_ERR(alt) in your tcpm.c hack.

I'm currently finishing the driver for the mux/redriver, will retry testing afterwards.


As I mentioned the TCPM driver has a lot of issues. The "hard reset" isn't implemented correctly so going into that mode gets it stuck in a bad state. Note I am using this dongle [1], and it only works correctly in sink mode (with the dongle providing power), in source mode it does negotiate the alt mode, but never gets the HPD event that DP driver is waiting for.

https://www.amazon.ca/Cable-Matters-Multiport-DisplayPort-Ethernet/dp/B06Y5N3YCD


I'll take a look for dongles that work in source mode (with RB5 being the sink). Reset being not fully implemented would answer on questions about replug. Any idea about VDM Tx errors?



Unfortunately I don't have a good idea. If you want to compare, here is my tcpm log [1] in source mode (HDK providing the power, it doesn't get the HPD event)

[1] https://gist.github.com/flto/62f352dbff3601abe05013bfebe7c0ab



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